| C.
N. Glover
TEXT:
"Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" Acts 16:30.
The
question in this text is the most important ever asked by a human being.
It is a question that everyone should be personally concerned about until
he has found the true answer in a genuine experience of grace in his own
heart. After having had this experience of grace he will become interested
in all other sinners having the same experience. The spirit of missions
in this would is multiplied just so far as the saving power of GodÕs grace
finds its way into human hearts.
"What
must I do to be saved?"
I.
SAVED FROM WHAT?
A. Saved
from sin. What is sin? Sin is the transgression
of God's law. What does sin do? It separates between God and man, and
produces both physical and spiritual death. Sin is the cause of every
unpleasant thing in this world, and in the world to come to all who
die without salvation.
B. Saved from
shame. Shame and everlasting contempt in the sight of God is the
portion of every human soul as long as he remains in a unsaved state,
and his sins are charged against him. Shame is a fruit of sin, and testifies
against the sinner both in this life and the life to come. It causes
the sinner to hide from the face of God in this world and to shrink
from the justice and judgment of God in the world to come.
C. Saved from
a depraved nature. All men are, by nature, children of wrath, Eph.
2:1-3. It is an immutable law of God that like begets like, and the
race of mankind having been begotten by depraved parents are all, therefore,
by nature depraved. Since all are by nature depraved, therefore, all
stand in need of salvation. There is only one way to be made free from
our sinful and natural state, and that is to DIE to the nature. By nature
all men are children of wrath, Eph. 2:3. All will remain children of
wrath until we die to that sinful nature, spiritually, or until we are
born of the Spirit and made partakers of God's nature. Since all men
are possessed of a depraved nature, all need to be saved from that nature
and its awful consequences.
D. Saved from
eternal death. Death is a direct consequence of sin. God has said,
The soul that sinneth shall die. All have sinned, therefore, all must
die. "Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and
death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned," Rom. 5:12. "For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of
God," Rom. 3:23. Sin separates a soul from God, and since all have
sinned, all are separated from God. This separation results in eternal
death.
E. Saved from
hell. Hell is the place of departed spirits, whether it be called
hades or gehenna; it is the ultimate abode of unsaved souls who have
lived their lives in unbelief. The subjects of hell are imprisoned forever
in a state of remorse and self-condemnation; an eternal night of despair;
it is an eternal dying. The Bible doctrine of hell is sufficient to
cause the most rebellious and stouthearted sinner to cry out in horror
of it, "WHAT MUST I DO TO BE SAVED?"
II.
HOW CAN I BE SAVED?
The
Apostle Paul answered the man's inquiry as to what he must do to be saved.
He said, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved," Acts 16:31.
A. Who is Jesus
Christ that He could save a soul? The world has always marveled
at how Jesus can save a soul from the condition and fate outlined above.
There is no possibility of any man being able to save himself, nor any
group of men being able to save another, for all men are under the same
condemnation. The Savior must Himself be free from sin and condemnation.
Since all men are born with a depraved nature and possessed of inherent
sin and have a disposition to sin, this depravity is passed on by the
fathers to the children, so the Savior could not be the son of an earthly
father, else He would have the sinful nature, and therefore, could not
qualify under the law to be a sinless Savior. Thus it follows that God
who is without and above sin must be His Father.
Here I cite a biological
fact. We get our life from our father and our body from our mother,
and we possess the same kind of life that our father possesses. God
being the Father of Jesus Christ, He did not possess a nature of depravity,
but a nature of innocence. He was born without depravity and without
sin, and His life was lived here on earth in the perfection of holiness.
"For he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we
might be made the righteousness of God in him," 2 Cor. 5:21. Christ
being without sin, was the ONE RIGHTEOUS PERSON on earth. He was the
Son of God, for God was His Father; and He was the Son of man (mankind)
for Mary was His mother. He, therefore, possessed two natures, viz:
divine and human, both qualified under the law of God, because of the
righteousness of His life and the sinlessness of His nature to be offered
as a substitute for such as are guilty under the penalty of the law.
So, He stood as the Lamb, having neither spot nor blemish.
B. God must vindicate
His justice. God does not offer a sinner MERCY at the expense of
His JUSTICE. The penalty of sin, which is death, must be paid and justice
satisfied before mercy and forgiveness can be bestowed. Since it requires
eternal death to pay the penalty of the law and satisfy the demands
of justice, there is neither time nor opportunity for man to do anything
but die eternally; so, he is truly without God and without hope in the
world when left to his own powers and abilities. If he is ever saved
it will be the result of help outside of himself.
C. Jesus Christ
our SUBSTITUTE under the penalty of sin. "And if any man sin,
we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; and
he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but for
the sins of the whole world," 1 John 2:1, 2. In this passage we
are taught that Jesus Christ the sinless One, makes Himself the sacrifice
for the sins of the whole world.
"All we like
sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and
the Lord hath laid on him the INIQUITY OF US ALL," Isa. 53:6. Isaiah
teaches us that the sacrifice for sin was for all of us. John tells
us that it is for the "whole world." Therefore, we see that
as by nature we are all included under sin, so also, by the sacrifice
of Jesus Christ, the righteous, this sin debt was paid for all. "Who
his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree, that we, being
dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by whose stripes ye were
healed," 1 Peter 2:24. Jesus Christ, being without sin, took all
of our sins upon Himself as if they were His very own, and on the CROSS
OF CALVARY BY HIS DEATH SATISFIED THE DEMANDS OF JUSTICE against every
one of us by paying for us the penalty of the law, which is eternal
death to the soul that sins. "Even as the Son of man came not to
be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for
many," Matt. 20:28. He gave His life by the shedding of His blood.
As there could be no remission for sins without the shedding of blood,
so His life's blood was the ransom price by which we are redeemed. Redemption
means to buy back from under the penalty of law. Jesus Christ died in
our stead, and the price of His blood was acceptable to God, the Father.
So, when the apostle saw Him transfigured in the state of His glory,
as He is today, after having triumphed over death, hell and the grave,
the voice of the Father was heard to say, "This is my beloved Son
in whom I am well pleased, here ye him." God accepted the price
of our redemption, and salvation was made possible and free to every
person who will accept it from Jesus Christ. The Father says, "HEAR
HIM."
III.
WHAT DOES JESUS SAY WE MUST DO TO BE SAVED?
Jesus
told Nicodemus, the ruler of the Jews, who came to inquire the way of
life, that he "MUST BE BORN AGAIN."
Nicodemus
said, "How can a man be born when he is old?" Both young and
old are born the second time in the same manner, John 3:3, 4.
A. There are
always conditions which produce a birth. The new birth is no exception
to the rule that conditions determine the birth. A begetting and a conception
must take place before there can be a birth. In the new birth, God is
the Father and the conception takes place in the spirit in man. "It
is the Spirit that quickeneth," John 6:63. Even as Jesus Christ
was conceived by the Holy Spirit in the womb of Mary, so also is the
new life conceived in the spirit of many by the Holy Spirit of God.
There are two conditions
which prepare the human spirit for the conception of the new life by
the Holy Spirit; these conditions are: Repentance toward God and faith
in the Lord Jesus Christ, both of which are dependent on the hearing
of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
B. Repentance. What is it? Jesus said, "Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise
perish," Luke 13:3, 5. Repentance is the resolute purpose of mind
and heart which tears us loose from the world and a life of sin: it
consists of three elements: (1) Intellectual. (2) Emotional. (3) Volitional.
When one hears the gospel, he comes to know that he is a sinner. The
knowledge of sin produces sorrow for sin. Sorrow for sin begets a willingness
to be saved from sin; this is repentance.
C. Faith. What is it? "But without faith it is impossible to please him:
for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a
rewarded of them that diligently seek him," Heb. 11:6. Since it
is impossible to please God without faith, and God certainly will not
receive into His eternal presence anything that displeases Him, we must
have faith to abide in His presence. "So then faith cometh by hearing,
and hearing by the word of God," Rom. 10:17. When the gospel is
preached to a sinner and it finds a responsive attitude from the sinner,
it produces faith in the heart of the sinner. Faith is also of three
elements: (1) Intellectual; by this the sinner is made to know that
God is, and that He rewards them that seek Him. (2) Belief, by the gospel,
the sinner comes to believe that Christ can and will save him. (3) Trust.
When the sinner knows that God will reward him, and that Christ will
save him, he is led to trust Christ to save him by surrendering himself
wholly into His hands. Repentance furnishes his attitude toward the
world of sin, while faith furnishes his attitude toward God and Christ,
and the two together cause him to surrender passively into the care
and keeping of the Holy Spirit: he being thus prepared, the Holy Spirit
begets within him the new life; then, he is saved; he is passed from
death into life. He has the same kind of life that is in God, his Father,
which is eternal life.
"For
by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourself: it is the
gift of God: not of works, lest any man should boast," Eph. 2:8,
9.
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